The Speed of Trust (Vayikra 5786)
Thirty years ago, in my junior year of college, I fulfilled a childhood dream: not only to conduct an orchestra one time, but to be the orchestra’s regular conductor. It wasn’t the Chicago Symphony or the New York Philharmonic, of course—it was a student ensemble, the Berkeley College Orchestra (Berkeley is one of the residential colleges at Yale). At the time, Yale boasted more than half a dozen such student-led orchestras, which was one of the major reasons I wanted to go there. And while many of those other ensembles have faded away, I’m delighted that that BCO is celebrating its 50th anniversary this spring.
The summer before that year, I spent a lot of time ruminating about how I wanted to show up with the orchestra. I watched lots of videos of conductors like Riccardo Muti and Herbert von Karajan and Leonard Bernstein. I remember watching one interview with the great violinist Isaac Stern in which he said that a conductor needed to know more about the score in his pinkie fingernail than the rest of the orchestra combined. On the other end of the spectrum, I had experienced conductors who were so deferential to the orchestra that during rehearsal they had asked the players, “Well what do you all think we should do?”
Through Scouting and student government, I had already had a lot of leadership training experience by this point in my life. Because of that, I knew in my gut that neither of these approaches were the ones I wanted to take. Even if I wanted to, there was no way I could pull off Stern’s dominating authority because, while I was a good musician and leader, I was no genius. There were people in the orchestra with stronger musical chops than me. So that just wasn’t going to fly, and I didn’t like the idea of that kind of dominance. Conversely, my experience of playing tuba in an orchestra for a conductor who opened up rehearsal for group discussion about the music was also unsatisfying. I knew firsthand that I and most others functioned best when the conductor created a sturdy container with clear expectations. The orchestras I played in weren’t set up to be true democracies. It was better for everyone if I could bring a clear vision and then help us all collectively to share it—adapting as we went, noting things that needed adjustment, making way for better ideas when they arose. It wasn’t about me being stronger than the orchestra; it was about serving in the way that all of us needed.
Today I can see that what I was working out in those rehearsals was a way of cultivating and maintaining trust among a community of people to help them do their work. At its essence, that’s what conducting is—and it’s what good leadership is in general. As the leadership theorist Stephen Covey taught, organizations “move at the speed of trust.” When trust is high, groups of people can do extraordinary things. When it’s low, the absence of trust weighs on the group’s ability to move ahead. In families, workplaces, classrooms, legislatures, theaters, synagogues—in my experience, wherever groups of human beings are involved, trust is the most important ingredient.
If trust is the most important ingredient in the healthy functioning of groups of human beings, then the ability to admit error is among the most important things for a leader to demonstrate. This isn’t rocket science. When leaders have led a group in the wrong direction, or when they have, wittingly or unwittingly, violated the rules that create the trust container itself, then they’re eroding the group’s trust, depleting its trust account. This has the ultimate effect of making it harder if not impossible for the group to do its work—a leader’s fundamental job. Given that mistakes are a built-in feature of being human, a leader’s ability to publicly admit error to the group they lead is essential.
Perhaps this is why Parashat Vayikra seemingly goes out of its way to enumerate the hatat sacrifices that leaders need to bring when they unintentionally mess up. When the Torah comes to the case of a nasi, or head of a tribe, it begins the verse with the word asher. Rashi, quoting the midrash, notes that asher is related to ashrei, happy: “Happy is the generation whose leader takes care to bring an atonement sacrifice even for an inadvertent act—because it is even more certain it is that such a leader will repent for their willful sins” (Rashi on Leviticus 4:22). Rabbi Menahem David Kalish of Amshinov (1860–1918) comments, “Wouldn’t it have been better if the leader hadn’t erred in the first place? Not so, for a leader who has not tasted sin lacks the capacity to forgive another. Such a one does not understand or feel in their heart the brokenness of the sinner and will wind up distancing and pushing away anyone who they perceive as not perfect like them.”
I don’t understand the rebbe to be arguing that leaders should try to make mistakes. Rather, I take him to mean that leaders—even saintly ones—are human beings, and thus imperfect. Leaders make mistakes, just like all humans. They, and the systems they serve, need a mechanism for doing teshuva. The Torah recognizes that and makes room for it. The leader’s hatat sacrifice exists because, on the one hand, the community needs to maintain a category of leadership so it can authorize leaders to help it do its work; and, on the other, it enables leaders and the communities they serve to repair breaches and harm when they happen, and restore the trust on which the life of the community depends.
This isn’t just for orchestra conductors or CEOs, though. While some may serve as leaders with authority, all of us exercise leadership all the time. One of my favorite expressions from this comes in an introductory essay by Parker Palmer to a wonderful poetry anthology called Leading From Within, with which I’ll close: “With every act of leadership, large and small, we help co-create the reality in which we live, from the microcosm of personal relationships to the macrocosm of war and peace… What does it take to qualify as a leader? Being human and being here. As long as I am here, doing whatever I am doing, I am leading, for better or for worse. And, if I may say so, so are you.”
For Reflection & Conversation
How easy or difficult is it for you to admit you’ve made a mistake? What makes it easier or harder? How might your spiritual practice support you in doing teshuva you need to do?